Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Abusive Woman Battered Man

My friend Sanjay is miserable. I try to analyse why a man who has
it all- cars, homes, friends who love him, looks, education just about
everything I can think of is so downcast?

“It’s my wife, she’s always ‘offhand’
and nasty, nagging and ticking me off, sometimes publically to my acute embarrassment.
Over the years I find it getting worse. The problem is I love her and I’ve been
married to her for so long I don’t want to end the relationship.”

You thought only women had the raw
end of the stick in relationships? The emotionally ravaged and dependent underdogs
are not always women, as feminists would have us believe. I have been
observing the tables slowly turning, with women becoming independent, assertive
and nearly like new converts with a growing aggression flaunting their
‘rights’. But rights come with a responsibility- that
of responsibility and composure.

Did you know that domestic violence
against men is not recognized by the law? There is little or no sympathy
toward harassed or abused men who sometimes have to kowtow to
blackmail by women who use the law and section 498A - dowry harassment-
to threaten men and take advantage of a law that is more or less one
sided. It is more fashionable to be a 'feminist' and hardly ever show sympathy
toward a battered man

'According to the recent National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB)
report, the number of married men committing suicide is actually higher than
that of married women. While, women ending their lives due to marital
harassment, is well played out in the media, and by several NGO voices, the
marginally higher number of married men who have taken their lives is seldom
heard. The NCRB report has it that 70.8% of the suicide victims are married
males while 66.6% are married females.'

(TOI)

Sanjay is just one such man who is a victim of
the new age woman, women doing lunches, who have flung away the demure avatar for the more sexy frock! The woman who generally throws her
weight around in ‘society’. Often in a case like this, she feels her husband is
priority ‘z’. The husband is unable to handle the combination of aggression and
independence the new woman displays in an equation of love and togetherness of
what they had perceived as ‘happily ever after’.

There are two noticeable drifts observant to me in our urban
societies where there is an influx of materialism and the desire to be upwardly
mobile. One is the quintessential Indian man who is used to being the cynosure
of his woman’s world as his father was to his mother is no longer his wife’s priority. I see the dynamics changing very fast, with a
woman becoming acutely aware of her ‘rights’ as a wife or a lover. The second
development I’m noticing is that the once meek, submissive woman go the other
extreme today- ‘feeling her oats’ with the whole equality of women refrain that
saw a beginning since females demanded the vote. I came back to India in the mid-nineties,
when most women wore the sari or shalwar kurta. The more ‘forward’ women wore
pants, but frocks and dresses were a very rare occurrence especially with non- Anglo
Indian women. Things have changed drastically, and with discarding the
traditional attire they donned the frock and shorts and also in many cases
discarded the traditional values of respect and care necessary for a marriage
to work. Urban women began to call the shots. Now while I would not get into
the feminist angle of equality here, I would like to go back to Sanjay and many
of his kin who now bear the brunt of an off-hand, brusque woman who stands to lose
the romance and love of the relationship that brought them together in the first
place. And in this one case Sanjay is still trying desperately to hold on
indulgently to the vestiges of the love they had shared.

What is the course Sanjay should take?

I'd say the first course of action would be to communicate his
concerns.

It's smarter to dig deeper into ones wife's problems and hold one’s
own while coming up with a solution. If it’s the growing malaise I’ve been
noticing in those marriages that have hit a roadblock- where women have found
home, hearth and husband second fiddle to popularity, glamor and lunches-I’d
say it is advisable for the man to communicate his sense of neglect to his partner.
He should not sound like he’s complaining but more as if he is sharing and so
giving her a wake up call. Have you noticed how we sometimes don’t even realize
that we are unable see ourselves objectively and being shown a mirror to
ourselves is helpful?

All relationships are a work in progress. I recommend that Sanjay
write an email to his wife about all the issues he sees in their marriage without
making it sound like one long dirge. Many a time we don't even realize that we
might have got carried away with life and the ‘trappings’ until we are shown a
mirror so that we may introspect. If Sanjay would write a letter it would be a
reality check to his wife Ravina on whose current priority list are lunches,
long phone-calls with girlfriends discussing diamonds, clothes and parties or
then handbags. It is always more effective when a spouse or partner articulates
their thoughts. It is a good way to be prepared and ready to combat any
negativity with equanimity and composure than to fly off the handle.

When communicating ones grievances one has to be careful about
giving respect to receive it in return. The moment one feels that sense of
entitlement you have lost your audience to treacherous feelings of resentment
and anger.

I've noticed that in a relationship whether it is a marriage or a
live in relationship, whenever one hits
a roadblock one thinks of walking out as a way out. Remember that it's always
smarter to find solutions and work things out before that final step. However
here's the punchline- if it's a no win situation to stay caged in a bad
situation thinking life is over is also a no win situation too. Should there be
no recourse I'd Sanjay should find himself a lawyer and find his way out.

Facebook Badge

Facebook Badge

Subscribe To Nisha JamVwal

ABOUT NISHA JAMVWAL

Nisha is a Columnist & Luxury Brand Consultant who consults with ZOYA by TATA, and other luxury brands . She has conslulted with Diago, Carlsberg, Swarovski, and done branding events for Natures Basket, Lancome & other International brands.

Columnist & Writer - Nisha is a columnist with newspapers & magazines & on the advisory board of Good Homes. English Literature & Art education translated into two books on Traditional Indian Craft & preserving ancient traditions of Craft.